The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations

abstract: Banded iron formations (BIFs) are among the earliest possible indicators for oxidation of the Archean biosphere. However, the origin of BIFs remains debated. Proposed formation mechanisms include oxidation of Fe(II) by O2 (Cloud, 1973), photoferrotrophy (Konhauser et al., 2002), and abioti...

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Other Authors: Castleberry, Parker (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.45558
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-45558
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-455582018-06-22T03:08:48Z The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations abstract: Banded iron formations (BIFs) are among the earliest possible indicators for oxidation of the Archean biosphere. However, the origin of BIFs remains debated. Proposed formation mechanisms include oxidation of Fe(II) by O2 (Cloud, 1973), photoferrotrophy (Konhauser et al., 2002), and abiotic UV photooxidation (Braterman et al., 1983; Konhauser et al., 2007). Resolving this debate could help determine whether BIFs are really indicators of O2, biological activity, or neither. To examine the viability of abiotic UV photooxidation of Fe, laboratory experiments were conducted in which Fe-bearing solutions were irradiated with different regions of the ultraviolet (UV) spectrum and Fe oxidation and precipitation were measured. The goal was to revisit previous experiments that obtained conflicting results, and extend these experiments by using a realistic bicarbonate buffered solution and a xenon (Xe) lamp to better match the solar spectrum and light intensity. In experiments reexamining previous work, Fe photooxidation and precipitation was observed. Using a series of wavelength cut-off filters, the reaction was determined not to be caused by light > 345 nm. Experiments using a bicarbonate buffered solution, simulating natural waters, and using unbuffered solutions, as in prior work showed the same wavelength sensitivity. In an experiment with a Xe lamp and realistic concentrations of Archean [Fe(II)], Fe precipitation was observed in hours, demonstrating the ability for photooxidation to occur significantly in a simulated natural setting. These results lead to modeled Fe photooxidation rates of 25 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1—near the low end of published BIF deposition rates, which range from 9 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1 to as high as 254 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1 (Konhauser et al., 2002; Trendall and Blockley, 1970). Because the rates are on the edge and the model has unquantified, favorable assumptions, these results suggest that photooxidation could contribute to, but might not be completely responsible for, large rapidly deposited BIFs such those in the Hamersley Basin. Further work is needed to improve the model and test photooxidation with other solution components. Though possibly unable to fully explain BIFs, UV light has significant oxidizing power, so the importance of photooxidation in the Archean as an environmental process and its impact on paleoredox proxies need to be determined. Dissertation/Thesis Castleberry, Parker (Author) Anbar, Ariel D (Advisor) Herckes, Pierre (Committee member) Lyons, James (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Geochemistry Geology Chemistry Archean Banded Iron Formation Experimental Paleoredox Photochemistry eng 61 pages Masters Thesis Biochemistry 2017 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.45558 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Geochemistry
Geology
Chemistry
Archean
Banded Iron Formation
Experimental
Paleoredox
Photochemistry
spellingShingle Geochemistry
Geology
Chemistry
Archean
Banded Iron Formation
Experimental
Paleoredox
Photochemistry
The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
description abstract: Banded iron formations (BIFs) are among the earliest possible indicators for oxidation of the Archean biosphere. However, the origin of BIFs remains debated. Proposed formation mechanisms include oxidation of Fe(II) by O2 (Cloud, 1973), photoferrotrophy (Konhauser et al., 2002), and abiotic UV photooxidation (Braterman et al., 1983; Konhauser et al., 2007). Resolving this debate could help determine whether BIFs are really indicators of O2, biological activity, or neither. To examine the viability of abiotic UV photooxidation of Fe, laboratory experiments were conducted in which Fe-bearing solutions were irradiated with different regions of the ultraviolet (UV) spectrum and Fe oxidation and precipitation were measured. The goal was to revisit previous experiments that obtained conflicting results, and extend these experiments by using a realistic bicarbonate buffered solution and a xenon (Xe) lamp to better match the solar spectrum and light intensity. In experiments reexamining previous work, Fe photooxidation and precipitation was observed. Using a series of wavelength cut-off filters, the reaction was determined not to be caused by light > 345 nm. Experiments using a bicarbonate buffered solution, simulating natural waters, and using unbuffered solutions, as in prior work showed the same wavelength sensitivity. In an experiment with a Xe lamp and realistic concentrations of Archean [Fe(II)], Fe precipitation was observed in hours, demonstrating the ability for photooxidation to occur significantly in a simulated natural setting. These results lead to modeled Fe photooxidation rates of 25 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1—near the low end of published BIF deposition rates, which range from 9 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1 to as high as 254 mg Fe cm-2 yr-1 (Konhauser et al., 2002; Trendall and Blockley, 1970). Because the rates are on the edge and the model has unquantified, favorable assumptions, these results suggest that photooxidation could contribute to, but might not be completely responsible for, large rapidly deposited BIFs such those in the Hamersley Basin. Further work is needed to improve the model and test photooxidation with other solution components. Though possibly unable to fully explain BIFs, UV light has significant oxidizing power, so the importance of photooxidation in the Archean as an environmental process and its impact on paleoredox proxies need to be determined. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Biochemistry 2017
author2 Castleberry, Parker (Author)
author_facet Castleberry, Parker (Author)
title The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
title_short The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
title_full The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
title_fullStr The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
title_full_unstemmed The Possible Photochemical Origins of Banded Iron Formations
title_sort possible photochemical origins of banded iron formations
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.45558
_version_ 1718701577835905024